This is a delightfully evocative and atmospheric book, well-written and carefully researched, delivering a very pleasurable reading experience and providing a very good compromise between academic depth and accessibility. This is a brilliant example of how popular history books should be written.
The author provides a nuanced, balanced and informative treatment of the conquest of Gaul and the subsequent political, economic and social evolution of the Gallic society, including its progressive but deep integration into the larger cultural milieu represented by the Graeco-Roman tradition, starting from the Caesar's military conquest, throughout the centuries up to the ultimate end of the Western Roman Empire. Cultural, political, societal, religious and ideological aspects are all treated by the author with skill and a very engaging style. I could not fault the information presented in the book, with the exception of just a few very minor typos (the only glaring one: when the author claims that Ancus Marcius was the second King in Rome). I also appreciated that the book, contrarily to what done in many similar books, is focused not just on the typical events, cultural environment and characters of the High Classical Period (first century BC and AD in particular), but he also explores some of the authors of the Late Classical Period, especially the likes of Ausonius. If only for this, the author deserves great praise.
The author's competence, his skillful and multi-faceted narrative, and his passion for the subject are genuine and highly contagious: reading this book rekindled my passion for Ancient History.
This highly accessible book, while not always necessarily providing much academic depth in the treatment of the subject, is nevertheless very well written and informative, and highly recommended to all readers with a passion for Ancient Roman history, in particular the ones who, like me, have been privileged to visit in the past some of the most important vestiges of the Roman presence that still enrich a few areas of the beautiful country that is France.
A fully deserved 5 star rating. I actually find it a bit surprising that this book and his author have not received a better response from the public, as I genuinely think that this book is a real little hidden gem.